词条 | Wood, John, the Elder |
释义 | Wood, John, the Elder British architect byname Wood of Bath baptized Aug. 26, 1704, Bath, Somerset, Eng. died May 23, 1754, Bath English architect and town planner who fixed the physical character of the resort city of Bath. Though some of his individual buildings were noteworthy exercises in Palladianism (a kind of 16th-century Italian Renaissance classicism), he was most highly regarded for his planning of streets and groups of houses as visual units. ![]() Wood's major works outside Bath were the exchanges in Bristol (1740–43) and Liverpool (1748–55; with his son). His Description of the Exchange at Bristol (1745) was reprinted in 1969. Among his other projects were the Bath-Bristol Canal and the Llandaff Cathedral (restoration, from 1735; now incorporated into the city of Cardiff). In the 1730s and '40s, Wood developed a unique theory of architecture, and his later projects were influenced by his belief that the Druids (Druid) had created a great civilization centred on Bath and that their architecture reflected divine laws of proportion and symbolism. His design for the Circus (see above) was based on this theory. Wood's writings The Origin of Building; or, The Plagiarism of the Heathens Detected (1741, reprinted 1968) and An Essay Towards a Description of the City of Bath (1742–43; 2nd ed. 1749), although they do not explicitly set out the theory, express his thinking at that time. Additional Reading Tim Mowl and Brian Earnshaw, John Wood: Architect of Obsession (1988); Kirsten Elliott, The Myth Maker: John Wood, 1704–1754 (2004). |
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